Inauguration-goers find tight DC security, delays

(AP) Inauguration-goers find tight DC security, delaysBy ERIC TUCKERAssociated PressWASHINGTONThe hundreds of thousands of spectators at President Barack Obama’s second inauguration encountered strict security screening Monday, slow-moving lines at checkpoints and a packed National Mall. But while some inauguration-goers complained of being stalled in getting into the swearing-in ceremony, or in accessing public transit, law enforcement authorities reported no major security problems from a crowd that appeared smaller than the record-breaking turnout of 2009.

“There was a lot of lessons learned brought into this one and a lot of pre-planning,” said Chris Geldart, director of the District of Columbia’s homeland security and emergency management agency. “I think it went as good as it could go.”

Heightened security was evident throughout the nation’s capital, from police officers stationed inside subway stations and on street corners to military Humvees that blocked downtown intersections. Spectators navigated through street closures, checkpoints that screened for a wide range of prohibited items, and demonstrators for varied causes. Flight restrictions were in place above Washington and more than 2,000 out-of-town officers were sworn in to work security.

There was no official crowd tally Monday night, but Geldart said it was “definitely above 800,000″ and possibly up to 1 million _ a large turnout, though still smaller than the 1.8 million who packed the mall for President Barack Obama’s first swearing-in ceremony.

Officials had hoped that more signs, plus additional metal detectors, would ease pedestrian congestion and reduce some of the logistical snafus from four years ago.

But even with smaller crowds, there were sporadic reports of slow-moving security lines, including at a gate between Union Station and the U.S. Capitol that came to a halt so a motorcade could pass and barriers could be repositioned. Stuck spectators vented on Twitter that the line did not move for at least a half-hour and that they were redirected to another security gate.

“People were frustrated because no one knew whether they should stay or go,” said Ralph Mason, 24, of Tallahassee, Fla., who was at the gate with his girlfriend. He said people in the line received conflicting advice, but he believed officials were trying to cope with big crowds and resolve the problem.

“It was a little tense this morning” at some of the gates, acknowledged Metropolitan Police Department Chief Cathy Lanier, who sent additional officers to deal with crowding for people with tickets to the ceremony. “I was getting a little nervous.”

Some repeat inauguration-goers said the experience was better than in 2009.

“It’s a lot easier because there aren’t as many people,” said Anita Sutterlin of Middlefield, Conn., from her perch on the top row of some aluminum bleachers near the White House. She was attending her third inauguration with her husband, Paul.

Others were frustrated in trying to reach their destination. Cheryl Tate, 52, of Flint, Mich., and her friend Karen Pugh, 43, gave up hope of reaching the Mall after trying to walk from RFK Stadium, in southeast Washington, where their bus parked. They ultimately found a free shuttle back to the stadium, where they waited for their group in anticipation of a long drive to Michigan.

“We didn’t see anything, unfortunately,” Tate said.

A smattering of protest groups occupied spots along the Pennsylvania Avenue parade route, but the demonstrations largely were directed at long-running national and international concerns rather than at policies specific to the Obama administration.

A few dozen protesters with the ANSWER Coalition, a peace and social justice coalition, gathered at Freedom Plaza near the White House to honor the late civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy and call for jobs, not war. Brian Becker, director of the antiwar coalition, said the group focused on messages that would resonate with a pro-Obama crowd. In addition to a poster focusing on King’s legacy and jobs, protesters had signs saying “Indict Bush Now” and “Drone Strikes (equals) War Crimes.”

The U.S. Capitol Police arrested three people, including a demonstrator who refused to come down from a tree and was shouting and chanting, said spokesman Shennell Antrobus.

John Diamond of Arlington, Va., handed out flyers inviting people to a “disinauguration ball” as people exited the inauguration ceremony. The flyers, which said “Not my president,” invited people to an event later Monday in Virginia. Diamond, who didn’t vote in this election, said he wants to encourage peace and opposes the drone attacks the president has authorized.

“We’re just out here celebrating freedom and trying to get people to think about the fact that we don’t need violence to control people or dictate the behaviors of other people and we should start looking for alternatives,” Diamond said.

Another activist, Malachy Kilbride, said that while he and other protesters with the Arc of Justice Coalition were pleased Obama had broken the race barrier by winning the presidency, “that does not negate the fact that we are very upset with issues like the bailout of the banks, corporate influence in government, big money in politics.”